The Kennedy mythology

WorldNetDaily contributor Linda Bowles is a
nationally syndicated columnist. She and her husband, Warren, have one
daughter, Michelle, and live on a ranch situated on the western slope of
the California Sierras.

Before we relegate the news story of the deaths of John F. Kennedy
Jr., his wife, Carolyn, and her sister Lauren Bessette to the archives,
there is much we can learn from it. The way this tragic story was
handled tells us a great deal about the media, our culture, our politics
and ourselves.

If the importance of a news event can be measured by the volume of
coverage, this particular story was of monumental historic significance.
However, this was a story of the deaths of three young people who were
closely connected to a well-known family. This was a tragedy, and it was
heart-wrenching, but it was not of historic importance.

Kennedy’s death became a platform for political propaganda. It was
seized upon as an opportunity to hype the Kennedy mythology. Under the
guise of reporting, we heard media personalities delivering eloquent
testimonials to their ideological icons.

It is obvious that Kennedy worship has become a surrogate religion
for many in the secular media. The core faith is this: President John
Kennedy walked on water, and begot a son who was born to walk among us
for a while — and eventually, rescue us from the clutches of evil
conservative Republicans. No evangelist on the street corner ever
shouted his message with more fervor than have the media in recent days
and weeks.

A large number of Americans were offended by assertions that the
Kennedys are “American royalty.” It is unseemly for members of the media
to project their own elitism and hero worship upon the rest of us. Let
the word go forth from this time and place that the Kennedys may be
Democrat royalty, but they are not American royalty.

Likewise, the frequently presented idea that the Kennedys are
“America’s family” and that we are all members of that family is not
only a liberal delusion but a grossly offensive one. The titular head of
that family is Edward “Ted” Kennedy, and the idea that I am related to
him in any way ought to be, if it is not, grounds for a defamation
lawsuit.

Until recently, I did not know it was a mission of the news media,
particularly the television news media, to feed us blarney, foster
myths, promote the development of cults, exploit human tragedy to
improve ratings, and entertain us with long wallows in the personal
misery of other people.

I have always subscribed to that old credo that it is the mission of
the news media to give light so the people can find their way. If the
people can see clearly what is going on around them, they are prepared
to make good choices. But if, instead of light, the people are immersed
in a fog of propaganda and disinformation, they will lose their way.

In a world of spin and deception, we need to remind ourselves that
there is an objective reality — one that exists outside our beliefs,
biases and perceptions. The world is what it is, independent of what we
think. The further we mentally stray from that objective reality, the
closer we come to irrationality or even insanity, defined as a loss of
contact with the way things really are.

In recent years, the expanded media has discovered that it can pounce
upon certain current events and hype them into major “happenings.” It
has been sad to watch so many Americans transformed into obsessive
voyeurs who visually feed on the intimate details and miseries of
others. It has been sad to watch an exploitative media prepare the
visual feasts.

We have become a nation of surrogate sins and vicarious pleasures,
and what is worse, allowed ourselves to become convinced it is all
harmless. People who would not think of invading someone’s privacy,
particularly in the midst of personal grief and loss, think nothing of
letting the media do it for them.

Our celebrity culture also reflects legions of lost people seeking to
fill a spiritual void in themselves. They crowd to their churches for
comfort, but not for guidance. Theirs is a hopeless, earth-bound search
for salvation. They are looking in all the wrong places. Human idols
die; they do not provide coattails to eternity.

When someone young dies, we have the sense that something has gone
wrong, some agreement breached. There is no closure; there are loose
ends, unresolved issues, aborted ambitions and unfulfilled promises. It
isn’t fair, or it just doesn’t make sense.

But the story of our lives is not fully told in the span of a
lifetime. It is worked out in the framework of eternity, where all is
resolved and where everything makes perfect sense — just as He
promised.